Old News

International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926

April 28, 1910 · Page 3 of 10

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MONTE CRISTO THE BEST OF ALU PLAYS Is one of the few plays A soul stirring worth your production irm, 'ggma while. It of the »"*will be precnted by one greatest Freeh G» Con OT C^Wk ever drama, rad's companies and er-.,i\s 'Year Money's presented to r^iPb Tr©. £1 vly V.3^ W if our Money 1. ?. I, the public. BacR," amd B&cSl XallL fT$E"~W6RLD FEET. no IS AT Attend the County Development Association International Palls Press Spohr and the Violin. Louis Spohr, the greatest of all German and Border Budget violinists and a man whose name is otherwise indelibly written on the County Official Paper at Big Falls on Friday, May 6th pages of musical history, was born at Published Every Thursday Morning Brunswick on April 5, 17S4. just fifteen great contemporary aud days after his INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS Special train leaves International Falls at 6:30 a. m. rival, Nicolo I'iiganini. first saw (lie PUBLISHING COMPANY light of the world. Two greater contrasts A. II. FERRELL. Man airer than these two men could not be imagined. I'aganini. the brilliant, SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 A YEAR flazzling, comet-like apparition, overawed the masses, for whose favor he made a high bid. while the German, Entered as Second Class Matter June 23, 15 Days 10im, at the post office at International Falls, MAY the serious, dignified, deep artist, appealed PROM APRIL 30th TO 15th INTRODUCTI So Days j| Minnesota, under the Act of Congress of to the connoisseurs and cultured March 1^70. I musicians. Spohr both by precept 9 and example exerted a tremendous influence a THURSDAY, APRIL 2S. 1910 on violin playing and violin composition and, in fact, on composition in genera!. The greatest musicians MOORISH SOLDIERS. of his day stood in awe of him, and even Iiichard Wagner, after Spohr Their Methods In Linttls -mc Their had produced "The Flying Dutchman" System of bic r,a!-. at Cassel in 1843, where he was then At lighting ou horseback i.b.Moors conductor of the opera, in a letter written are adepts and fxtremel.v Bui Remember to the great violinist displayed a E. B. 'S Satisfaction E E A N the}' aro iiu oi uubl in/y ami seldom sense of gratitude of which in later indulge- in night at nick. When they years he seemed incapable. Spohr died I do as always at Cassel in 1S59.—Argonaut. attack in force the liiM\seu.:eu usually O I N S O E give a lift to the foot soldiers who accompany INBW I Advertise them or allow them run Tit For Tat. Guaranteed A newspaper man who called on a alongside and hold on to a stirrup iron. local manufacturer the other day to The mounted men then make a charge, pay a friendly visit found the latter wheel round and retire aud make way My stocK of High Art was so late in arriving tfyat now I find I ari) over stocked. Clothing In no mood for friendly calls. He was for the footmen, who crawl along the in a white heat. This fact, together with my desire to become more acquair)ted with the people of International ground, almost invisible, and who rise "What's the matterV" asked the visitor. to the attack if they come within striking Falls and surrouQdigg country, has prompted me to give a 15 days Introduction "You don't seem pleased to see distance of (he enemy. As a rule, me." the liiffians prefer to lure detached Sale and give such bargaiQS iQ good CLOTHES, SHOES ar)d HATS as I)as never been "Oh, I would be pleased to see you," parties into an ambush or defile and said the other, "if I wasn't so mighty thus inflict heavy loss upon them. The offered in this sectioi) before. mad at the meanest piece of petty mounted men seldom dismount to fire, holdup I ever saw. Here's a check and their firing, being from the saddle. from a fellow who owed me a bill for is very inaccurate. Should the advance ninety days, and darned if he hasn't of the white troops be slow or Good Good effect a bold mailed the check at last and subtract- ^hesitating the Moors •combination between horsemen and the postage stamp tlie 2 cents for that brought the letter." footmen and generally succeed in inflicting Clothes Clothes "Can you beat that?" exclaimed the heavy losses on their enemy. visitor as he eyed the check. The prime tactics of the Moors are to "I can," said the other as he reached delay the advance of an enemy as for a telegraph blank. "I am going to much as possible by mounted rifle tire wire him a receipt in full, and I'll wire until they can discern its extent and Call. It collect."—Newark direction and subsequently to try enveloping the advancing force. The Suits worth Way*. Supreme Court bribes also indulge in sniping, but not Suits worth up When the supreme court of the United rto a very great extent, and they also States assembles at 12 o'clock on up to $25.00 light individually. They do not neglect each Monday the room is filled with opportunities for stratagem and can lawyers, clerks, newspaper men and to $25.00 effect some very clever ruses. They spectators. Routine announcements are also guilty of abusing the services are made by the chief justice in a Now .of the white flag in action. voice no one -can understand. Decisions ^The Moorish intelligence system of great moment are rendered by an excellent one, and the tribes are other justices in mumbled words which seldom without information regarding are not heard. Lawyers, clerks, newspaper $15.00 Now the movements of an enemy. They men and spectators stare hard at have also an excellent system of signaling the honorable justice who may be talking at night by means of small fires or reading, some with hands curved dotted about the hills and ravines, into a round board so that they can which are obscured and revealed in catch a few words if possible. But no accordance with an ingenious code of $15.00 one in the courtroom shouts "Louder!" Alterations Extra signals known to themselves.—Chicago No one would last very long if he did. News. I And should a person be sentenced for contempt of the supreme court it would DREAM INSPIRATION. be the end. As an old colored em- ployee once said, "Dere ain't no appeal 1 of from dis cote."—St. Louis Star. Intellectual Achievements Born Alterations Extra Visions In Sleep. I Spanish Surnames. It is well known, says H. Addington In addition to three or four Christian Bruce in Success Magazine, that names the Spanish child bears the combined dreams have stimulated men to remarkable family names of his father and irdellectual achievements mother. When the surnames are doubled and- have even supplied the material or connected by the y, meaning for these achievements. Thus Coleridge "and," the first is the more important composed "Kublai Khan" in a one and the only one that may be taken dream. Tartini got his "Devil's Sonata" alone, for it is in the father's name, from a dream in which the devil while the last is in the name of the appeared and challenged him to a musical mother. In Spain they know no "senior" competition. It was a dream that •:£i" and "junior." Father and son gave Voltaire the first canto of his may bear the same Christian name, "Henriade." and Dante's "Divina Cominedia" but each takes his own mother's name Is likewise said to have been as a distinction, the father being, for Inspired by a dream. Instance, Pedro Diaz Castillo and the Many novelists on their own admission •on Pedro Diaz Blanco. 20 per cent Discount have obtained the plots for some flcKibbin Hats 'sr of their best works from materials Swallowed and Climbed. provided in dreams. A particularly A woman newly rich was invited to on all shoes impressive instance is that of Robert an aristocratic dinner party. During $4.00 I have just received a large shipment of sample McKibbin $5.00 ,Shoes Louis Stevenson, whose "Chapter on the course of fowl and salad this woman 3-60 Dreams" in his book "Across the 4.50 Shoes noticed with dismay a fat, furry Hats worth $3.00 which I will offer this during 3-20 Plains" should be read by all who 4.00 Shoes caterpillar on her topmost leaf of lettuce. would learn what dreams can do for a 2.80 Glancing up, she met her aristocratic 3.50 Shoes $1.90 sale at.. man Intellectually. The solution of hostess' eye. The hostess, too. baffling mathematical problems, the had seen the caterpillar. Her gaze Implored Ideas necessary to complete some invention. the guest to save the dinner making a reasonable deposit on a suit of clothes, will hold same until the 15th of May. By I have been supplied by dreams. from catastrophe. The guest gave her V. E. B. FREEMAN'S NEW STORE Occasionally the dreamer has been hostess a reassuring smile. Then she known to rise In his sleep and jot doubled a lettuce leaf around the caterpillar "c down I lie information thus acquired. and swallowed it calmly. The In such cases he usually forgets. *11 took of awe and gratitude that her about the helpful dream and oiti^iA|( hostess gave her was an assurance tng is greatly surprised at finding tbe ttat her footing In ao$iety was at last for Men and Young Men. record he lias made of it, which shows firmly established. that—as witb the visions so potently "Did you think," said Mrs. Newlyrich International State BanK BIdg. Influencing health—it Is possible for to her daughter afterward, "that International Falls, Minn dreams to aid a man in an Intellectual I'd lose a chance of establishing the without lila belmr consciously family socially for a little thing like -yp i«am of them. ft caterpillar *z J? -6T. *w